This forum is now a read-only archive. All commenting, posting, registration services have been turned off. Those needing community support and/or wanting to ask questions should refer to the Tag/Forum map, and to http://spring.io/questions for a curated list of stackoverflow tags that Pivotal engineers, and the community, monitor.

The underlying table has a column called TRANSACTION_FLAG which is varchar(1). So it takes only 1 char of data. But as you can see from the above code, transaction flag is a boolean.
But surprisingly, the above code worked perfectly fine in Spring 2.5.6. When run, it used to insert 0 or 1, based on the flag. How did this happen? How did Spring 2.5.6 automatically convert a boolean to 0 or 1? Did it read the column metadata and convert a boolean to fit in the column size? What if I needed a Y or N instead of 0 or 1?

When I upgraded to Spring 3.1.0 JDBC jar, the same logic failed. It gives the error column data too long for the column. I think this error is correct. Spring should not automatically convert anything from boolean to whatever it likes by reading column metadata.